Hopeful Israel invites bids for gas exploration

Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz gesture speaks during a press conference at the 23rd World Energy Congress on October 13, 2016 in Istanbul (AFP Photo/Ozan Kose)

Jerusalem (AFP) - Israel on Tuesday invited bids for 24 new offshore oil-and-gas exploration licences it hopes will bring more major finds in the Mediterranean as it strives to become an energy exporter.

"We are offering for exploration half of our economic waters in 24 blocks," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said, announcing the offer which closes on April 21.

"Estimates are that most of the natural gas in Israel's economic waters is yet to be found," he said at a news conference, adding the US energy department shared that view.

The government hopes the new blocks turn up discoveries comparable to the Tamar and Leviathan natural gas fields found off its coast in recent years.

Israel hopes the Leviathan field and others to come will eventually allow it to become a gas exporter, which could provide it with additional leverage in the turbulent Middle East.

In September neighbouring Jordan signed a contract to buy gas from Leviathan for the first time and Steinitz said there had been contacts with the Egyptians over a possible sales deal.

"I think that the Egyptian option realistically exists," he said, without giving details.

He said that prospects of a major gas deal had also helped reconciliation talks with Turkey after a bitter six-year rift.

It was the highest level official meeting since the two countries normalised ties in June after a 2010 crisis triggered by Israel's deadly storming of a Gaza-bound ship.

"We decided to move ahead on the plan for a gas export pipeline from Israel to Turkey, both for the benefit of the Turkish economy but also for piping onward to Europe through the Turkish system," Steinitz said.

- Hedging bets -

Despite the rapprochement, there is still potential for tension between the two countries.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sees himself as a champion of the Palestinian cause and is a backer of Israel's Islamist Palestinian foe Hamas.

At Tuesday's news conference Steinitz was asked if he saw Ankara as a "stable customer".

"The whole world has not been particularly stable in recent years but that is the world in which we live," he said.

"I think that the Turkish economy is very stable and very strong."

But he said his strategy on gas exports was to hedge Israel's bets.

"I want more than one export option. I want us to have at least two or maybe three pipelines that will allow export not only to this region but also... to Europe."

One of his plans, he said, was for "the longest marine pipeline in the world" to run from Israel through Cyprus and Greece to Italy and into the European infrastructure.

Steinitz said that his idea was at first thought to be technically impossible and economically unviable but a European Union study had since found it to be feasible.

"There was a decision with the Europeans for continued dialogue for a long gas line from Israel to Italy."

The energy ministry said a survey commissioned from French consulting company Beicip Franlab indicated a potential from new sites of about 6.6 billion barrels of oil and 2,137 billion cubic metres of gas.

Israel's Tamar field, discovered in 2009 and which began production in 2013, has estimated reserves of up to 238 billion cubic metres (8.4 trillion cubic feet).

Leviathan, discovered in 2010 and set to begin production in 2019, is estimated to hold 18.9 trillion cubic feet (535 billion cubic metres) of natural gas, along with 34.1 million barrels of condensate.

Conditions for the new tenders are set out in a dedicated website, www.energy-sea.gov.il.